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http://www.odu.edu//research/initiatives/ccslri
Access-EU, SLR conf,
Oct 30-31, 2013
CCPO/OEAS
Panel 1: The Physical Threat: State of
the Science of Rising Sea Levels and
Extreme Storms
• Tal Ezer, ODU: physical aspects of sea level rise & flooding
• Robert Tuleya, ODU: hurricanes and tropical storms
• Kelly Burks-Copes, USACE: risk assessment modeling
• David Titley, PSU: Navy's task force on climate change
, November, 2010
, June, 2012
“Norfolk- second only to New Orleans among U.S. cities threatened by flooding”
PBS, April, 2012
Norfolk in
the News
Virginian Pilot, February, 2012
4-foot flood (high-tide, no storm, 8/25/2012)
Historic Hague district of Norfolk
Minor Tidal Flooding:
Used to be a rare
event, now almost
every month…
5-foot flood (high-tide & small storm, 10/09/2013)
Medium Flooding:
Until 1960s- once in 2y event
Now- several times a year
7-foot flood (hurricane Sandy, 10/29/2012)
Major Flooding:
Past- once in 30y event
Now- once in 2y event
after
before
Questions:
• What causes Sea Level Rise (SLR)?
• How do SLR and storms affects flooding?
• Why sea level is rising faster at some places
(e.g., along the U.S. East Coast) than others?
• How can we make SLR projections? and use the
information to plan future adaptation or mitigation
Sea level rise rates at points along the US East Coast are relatively higher than in other places
“hotspot of accelerated
sea level rise”
(Sallenger et al., 2012; Boon, 2012;
Ezer et al., 2013; Kopp, 2013)
SLR in the mid-Atlantic ~3-6 mm/y
compared with global SLR of past
century of ~1.7 mm/y
thermal expansion
melting ice sheets & glaciers
volume change
Global vs. Local Sea Level Rise:
Local (relative) SLR =
Global SLR ± Land Subsidence/Uplift ± Ocean Dynamics
Land is sinking around the Chesapeake Bay:
- Postglacial Rebound
- Chesapeake Impact Crater
- Groundwater removal
Climate change in ocean currents may
slowdown the Gulf Stream and increase
sea level along the mid-Atlantic coast
(Ezer et al., 2013)
Sea Level Rise over the past 130 years
Storm surge 
Storm+Tide
Local SLR
Global SLR
Top storm surges in Norfolk, VA
1933
2009
- What causes this dramatic increase
in flooding?
~36cm
(1.2ft)
Mean Sea Level Rise Rates
(from linear regression)
Cape Hatteras 
linear local land subsidence
+
linear global SLR
North of Cape Hatteras
mm/y
Global
Atlantic
South of Cape Hatteras
Sea Level Rise Acceleration
(SLR will be faster in the future
than it was in the past)
Cape Hatteras 
• Eliminates the long-term geological
land movement which is constant
mm/y2
North of Cape Hatteras
South of Cape Hatteras
Atlantic
Global
Gulf Stream measurements:
• from satellite altimeter
• from cable across the Florida Straits
Is the Gulf Stream weakening after 2004?
Florida Current Transport
Gulf Stream Gradient
Sea level rise is not constant:
Why do stations in different locations show the same pattern?
SL (m)
Sea Level
Chesapeake Bay
Atlantic Coast
Decline in Gulf
Stream strength
since 2004
Main Points:
Global sea level scenarios
(based on climate models)
• sea level is not rising evenly
• sea level is not rising in a
constant rate (decadal
variations & acceleration)
• global projections have large
range (different scenarios)
• need accurate local/regional
SLR projections for planning
purposes
Local projections (Boston, MA)
(based on statistical models)